McMillan appointed White Ferns’ batting, fielding coach ahead of World Cup

Mr. Jindal
3 Min Read

File picture of former New Zealand cricketer Craig Mcmillan.

File picture of former New Zealand cricketer Craig Mcmillan.
| Photo Credit: The Hindu

Former New Zealand all-rounder Craig McMillan was on Tuesday appointed as the batting and fielding coach of the White Ferns ahead of the Women’s ODI World Cup, which will be jointly hosted by India and Sri Lanka from September 30.

The 48-year-old, who played 55 Tests and 197 ODIs primarily as a batter scoring more than 7,500 runs, joins head coach Ben Sawyer on a full-time basis.

McMillan had earlier been part of the New Zealand women team during their T20 World Cup triumph in 2024.

“I’m over the moon to be in this role with the White Ferns. The women’s game is going from strength to strength, and I’m excited to continue to work with our talented players and help them reach their goals,” McMillan was quoted as saying by ICC.

“The last year has gone so quickly and I’ve loved every minute of being part of a team that continues to improve, challenge one another, and does special things on the world stage.” The White Ferns have won the Cricket World Cup once, in 2000, and finished runners-up three times.

Several members of the squad travelled to Chennai last month for a training camp in a bid to adapt to spin-friendly conditions.

McMillan said the team’s build-up has been good and the White Ferns will go with the aim of adding to their trophy cabinet, having won the T20 World Cup last year.

“It’s been a busy period leading into the 50-over World Cup. We’ve had a number of camps including one in Chennai which exposed the players to Indian conditions like what they’ll face in October-November.

“The team is pumped to get back to India and take on another World Cup,” he said.

New Zealand begin their World Cup campaign against Trans-Tasman rivals Australia on October 1 at Indore.

The overall prize money of the eight-team marquee tournament has been increased to $13.88 million (₹122.5 crore approx), a massive jump of 297% from the $3.5 million (₹31 crore approx) at the last edition held in New Zealand in 2022.

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